Global Financial Centers 2011

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The Global Financial Centres Index 11 MARCH 2012 Financial Centre Futures 1 – 2012 The Qatar Financial Centre Authority sponsors Long Finance’s ‘Financial Centre Futures’ programme. Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) is a financial and business centre established by the government of Qatar in 2005 to attract international financial services and multinational corporations to grow and develop the market for financial services in the region. QFC consists of a commercial arm, the QFC Authority; and an independent financial regulator, the QFC Regulatory Authority. It also has an independent judiciary which comprises a civil and commercial court and a regulatory tribunal. QFC aims to help all QFC licensed firms generate new and sustainable revenue streams. It provides access to local and regional investment opportunities. Business can be transacted inside or outside Qatar, in local or foreign currency. Uniquely, this allows businesses to operate both locally and internationally. Furthermore, QFC allows 100% ownership by foreign companies, and all profits can be remitted outside of Qatar. The QFC Authority is responsible for the organisation’s commercial strategy and for developing relationships with the global financial community and other key institutions both within and outside Qatar. One of the most important roles of QFCA is to approve and issue licences to individuals, businesses and other entities that wish to incorporate or establish themselves in Qatar with the Centre. The QFC Regulatory Authority is an independent statutory body and authorises and supervises businesses that conduct financial services activities in, or from, the QFC. It has powers to authorise, supervise and, where necessary, discipline regulated firms and individuals. Z/Yen Group thanks the City of London Corporation for its cooperation in the development of the GFCI and for the use of the related data still used in the GFCI. The author of this report, Mark Yeandle, is very grateful to other members of the GFCI team – in particular, Nick Danev, Chiara von Gunten, Stephanie Rochford and Michael Mainelli. The Global Financial Centres Index 11 1 Foreword The Global Financial Centres Index is a barometer, tracking the shifts of competitiveness in global financial centres, and over the last few years it has shown that Canada’s economy is weathering the storm. We entered the downturn in better condition than many, because when times were good we managed surplus budgets and kept down the national debt. Today Canada has the lowest net debt to GDP ratio in the G-7. Forbes magazine ranks Canada as the best country in the world in which to do business. We have generous R&D tax incentives, first rate technology and innovation, a highly skilled workforce, investor protection and a lack of red tape. The OECD and the IMF predict that our economy will continue to be a leader in the industrialised world over the next two years. Canada’s banks are well capitalised, stable and secure. They largely stayed out of sub-prime mortgages and mortgage backed securities, and their strong balance sheets have enabled them to expand and pick up both assets and talent that other global banks were forced to sell. In 2012, for the fourth year in a row, The World Economic Forum described Canada’s banks “as the soundest in the world”. Six of the world’s 50 safest banks and four of North America’s ten largest banks are Canadian. Strong leadership, good management and a prudent regulatory system served us well. Canada’s financial services sector has grown and diversified significantly, generating sales of more than $82.4 billion in 2010. Canada has leading banks, major insurance companies, asset managers including cutting edge pension funds, and some of the largest wealth management operations in the world. We are increasingly competitive and global in reach. Four Canadian cities are now in the top 30 of the Global Financial Centres Index. Toronto offers a breadth of financial services activity that makes it the third largest financial services centre in all of North America. Vancouver is Canada’s Pacific gateway, offering unique access to trade financing in the fast growing Asia Pacific markets. Calgary is a global hub for energy and commodity financing. Montreal has strong expertise in pension management, and leads in developing software for the financial services sector. Canada’s financial services sector is a key asset of the Canadian economy. Looking ahead, we will continue to build partnerships and international networks that aim to capture opportunities as the global economy returns to growth and prosperity. Gordon Campbell Canadian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom 2 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 GFCI 11 – Summary and Headlines The GFCI provides profiles, ratings and rankings for 77 financial centres, drawing on two separate sources of data – instrumental factors (external indices) and responses to an online survey. The GFCI was first published by the Z/Yen Group in March 2007 and has subsequently been updated every six months. Successive growth in the number of respondents and data has enabled us to highlight the changing priorities and concerns of financial professionals over this time, particularly since financial crises began to unfold in 2007 and 2008. This is the eleventh edition of GFCI (GFCI 11). Instrumental factors: previous research indicates that many factors combine to make a financial centre competitive. These factors can be grouped into five over-arching ‘areas of competitiveness’: People, Business Environment, Infrastructure, Market Access and General Competitiveness. Evidence of a centre’s performance in these areas is drawn from a range of external measures. For example, evidence about a fair and just business environment is drawn from a corruption perception index and an opacity index. 80 factors have been used in GFCI 11, of which 37 have been updated since GFCI 10 and five are new to the GFCI (see page 42 for details on all external measures used in the GFCI 11 model). Financial centre assessments: GFCI uses responses to an ongoing online questionnaire completed by international financial services professionals. Respondents are asked to rate those centres with which they are familiar and to answer a number of questions relating to their perceptions of competitiveness. Overall, 26,853 financial centre assessments from 1,778 financial services professionals were used to compute GFCI 11, with older assessments discounted according to age. Full details of the methodology behind GFCI 11 can be found on page 37. The ratings and rankings are calculated using a ‘factor assessment model’, which combines the instrumental factors and questionnaire assessments. The full list of the 77 financial centres rated and profiled in GFCI 11 is shown on page 4. The main headlines of GFCI 11 are: • The past trend of large rises in the ratings of Asia/Pacific centres has paused. Hong Kong, Singapore, Tokyo, Shanghai, Beijing, Taipei and Shenzhen all decline in GFCI 11. Centres on the mainland of China have seen significant declines with Shanghai down 37 points and Beijing down 11. Hong Kong sees a 16 point drop and is now 27 points below London. We believe that these results in Asia are just an interlude in the long-term trend of the increasing importance of the region rather than a fundamental change in fortunes. Overall respondents think that the Asian centres will continue to become more significant. Some respondents question whether financial centres on mainland China will be able to continue their growth without relaxations in currency controls. It is worth noting that Seoul and Sydney are the only centres in Asia/Pacific showing higher ratings than in GFCI 10. “Several commentators on China are revising their expectations downwards – currency controls are a real issue.” Asset Manager based in Hong Kong • Offshore centres have suffered significant reputational damage in the past four years. In GFCI 10 several of these centres were beginning to recover and this trend has continued. Jersey, Guernsey, the Cayman Islands, the British Virgin Islands, the Isle of Man, Gibraltar and Mauritius (listed in order The Global Financial Centres Index 11 3 of GFCI rank) have all made modest gains in the ratings. Jersey and Guernsey remain the leading offshore centres. A number of our respondents believe that centres like Zurich, Geneva and Luxembourg, whilst not geographically ‘offshore’, compete in a similar manner to the genuinely offshore centres. It is interesting to note that Zurich, Geneva and Luxembourg have all risen in the GFCI 11 ratings. • The recent crisis of the Euro has changed the balance of interest within the Eurozone. The capital cities of the weaker Euro economies are clearly suffering. Dublin, Milan, Madrid, Lisbon and Athens were all down in GFCI 10 and this decline has continued in GFCI 11 with these five centres all down in the rankings again. In contrast to the centres in the weaker Eurozone economies, Frankfurt and Paris have both risen in the ranks (by two places and three places respectively). This may be as a result of the political lead that Germany and France have been showing in attempting to come to terms with the Eurozone crisis. Historically, Frankfurt and Paris have moved up and down in the rankings together in all editions of the GFCI (this can be seen in Chart 10 on page 16). There have been some other strong performances in Europe with Vienna (up 21 points), Amsterdam (up 12), Warsaw (up 13), and the Scandinavian centres of Stockholm, Oslo and Helsinki all doing well. • Confidence amongst financial services professionals, measured by average assessments of the leading centres, was relatively stable during 2011. This is demonstrated by a stability in the ‘spread’ (measured by standard deviation) of assessments. Chart 1 below shows the stability of overall ratings in 2011. Chart 1 | Three month rolling average assessments of the top 25 centres 4 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 The full set of GFCI 11 ranks and ratings are shown in Table 1 below: Table 1 | GFCI 11 ranks and ratings Centre London New York Hong Kong Singapore Tokyo Zurich Chicago Shanghai Seoul Toronto Boston San Francisco Frankfurt Geneva Washington D.C. Sydney Vancouver Montreal Munich Melbourne Jersey Paris Luxembourg Osaka Stockholm Beijing Taipei Calgary Dubai Wellington Guernsey Shenzhen Amsterdam Vienna Kuala Lumpur Copenhagen Edinburgh Qatar Oslo Cayman Islands Glasgow Helsinki Hamilton Isle of Man British Virgin Islands Dublin Brussels GFCI 11 Rank Rating 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 781 772 754 729 693 689 688 687 686 685 684 683 681 679 677 674 667 658 656 653 652 650 648 647 645 644 643 642 641 640 639 638 637 636 635 634 632 630 629 628 627 626 625 624 623 621 620 GFCI 10 Rank Rating 1 2 3 4 6 8 7 5 11 10 12 9 16 13 14 15 17 20 22 18 21 24 29 26 28 19 23 – 36 27 31 25 35 42 38 34 32 30 37 46 33 39 41 40 45 43 44 774 773 770 735 695 686 692 724 679 680 678 681 667 672 670 669 661 652 649 656 650 643 637 641 638 655 645 – 622 640 635 642 625 615 619 626 632 636 621 610 628 618 616 617 611 614 612 CHANGES Rank Rating – – – L1 – M -16 M -2 L3 M -6 M -1 L7 L2 – M -3 L2 – M -37 L5 L7 M -4 M -3 M -1 M -1 M -1 L2 M -2 L2 L2 – – L1 L3 L6 L 14 L7 L7 L6 L5 L2 L3 L6 M -3 L2 L7 L6 L7 L7 L6 L 11 M -7 L3 M -4 L7 M -11 M -2 New M -3 M -7 – L 19 L4 – New L8 M -2 M -5 M -8 M -2 M -8 M -3 M -2 M -4 M -3 M -3 – L6 L3 L2 L 21 L 16 L8 – L 12 M -4 M -6 L 18 M -1 L8 L9 L 12 L7 L8 L7 L8 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 5 Centre Abu Dhabi Madrid Sao Paulo Mexico City Milan Rio de Janeiro Warsaw Johannesburg Prague Bahrain Rome Bangkok Monaco Istanbul Jakarta Gibraltar Mumbai Moscow Mauritius Buenos Aires Lisbon Manila Riyadh Tallinn Malta St. Petersburg Budapest Bahamas Reykjavik Athens GFCI 11 Rank Rating 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 618 617 612 610 609 608 606 603 602 600 596 594 593 590 588 587 584 583 578 577 575 573 572 570 568 567 552 550 517 468 GFCI 10 Rank Rating 48 49 47 50 53 56 52 51 55 54 57 59 62 65 58 64 61 68 63 60 69 66 67 70 71 73 72 74 75 608 607 609 606 602 593 603 605 596 597 585 583 580 577 584 578 581 571 579 582 570 575 574 568 554 543 545 491 477 CHANGES Rank Rating New M -1 M -4 M -1 New L5 L1 L9 M -2 L2 – L3 M -3 M -5 M -4 M -2 M -1 L3 L1 M -2 L 13 M -3 – L6 M -1 L 10 L 11 L3 L6 L 10 L9 L4 M -5 M -4 M -4 M -8 M -4 – L2 – M -2 M -7 M -3 L3 L7 L2 M -4 M -2 M -1 M -4 – M -2 L 13 L5 L9 M -3 M -2 M -2 L 26 M -9 6 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Abu Dhabi and Calgary enter the GFCI for the first time. Canada now has four centres in the top 30 of the GFCI. Panama, Cyprus and Tel Aviv have been added to the GFCI questionnaire recently but have yet to acquire enough assessments to be rated in the index. (approximately 70% of equity trading) and are likely to remain powerful financial centres for the foreseeable future. We continue to believe that the relationships between London, New York and Hong Kong are mutually supportive. Whilst some industry Chart 2 | Top four centres GFCI ratings over time 850 780 710 640 London ■ New York ■ Hong Kong ■ Singapore ■ 570 500 I1 FC G G G G G Chart 2 shows the relative stability of the leading centres. In GFCI 10 Hong Kong was just three points behind New York and four points behind London. Hong Kong has now fallen back a little but maintains its position as the third global financial centre. These three centres control a large proportion of financial transactions Chart 3 | Close links with another financial centre My financial centre would benefit from the links with this centre 51% My financial centre would see little or no change 20% My financial centre would lose business to this centre 29% G I1 FC FC G G FC G G I FC 2 I7 FC G FC I3 FC I4 FC FC I6 FC I1 I5 professionals still see a great deal of competition, others from the industry appear to recognise that working together on certain elements of regulatory reform is likely to enhance the competitiveness of these centres. We recently asked GFCI respondents “If a financial centre which was closely linked with your centre, became significantly more important, how would this affect your financial I8 I9 0 1 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 7 centre. Chart 3 shows that just over half the respondents think that financial centres can benefit from close links with other centres. London and New York must not believe that they are ‘untouchable’. Whilst Hong Kong and other Asian centres have declined a little in GFCI 11, the overall trend of the leading Asian centres is upward. London still has to negotiate some challenging regulatory changes (for example as recommended by the Vickers report1). Tax levels in the UK remain unpopular within the financial services sector. In particular, the 50% personal tax rate for top earners (gross income greater than £150K) is deeply unpopular among financial services professionals and is the subject of much conjecture as to how much damage it is doing to the competitiveness of London. We sent a supplementary questionnaire to GFCI respondents in February 2012 asking for opinions on several topical issues in financial services. The number of responses is fewer than in the overall GFCI, but they are still statistically significant. The first question asked was – “How would the imposition of a financial transaction tax affect the competitiveness of your financial centre?” The responses are shown in Chart 4 and there is an overwhelming feeling that transaction taxes (unless imposed in all financial centres) would reduce competitiveness: Chart 4 | The effect of a financial transaction tax It would enhance the competitiveness of my financial centre 8% It would have little or no effect on my financial centre 18% It would lead to a decrease in the competitiveness of my financial centre 73% “Any steps to introduce financial transaction taxes should be taken at a global level rather than in individual jurisdictions or financial centres.” Director of Investment Bank based in Paris 1 The Independent Commission on Banking, Final Report and Recommendations, Sir John Vickers, September 2011 8 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 When asked “How would the mandatory separation of retail and investment banking affect your financial centre?” over half of our respondents did not think mandatory separation would have a significant effect on their financial centres. Many comments suggest that respondents are in favour of separating retail and investment banking but some question whether it would be effective: “It is not clear that the universal banking model was a cause of the crisis, or that constraining it will have positive effects.” Financial Services Consultant based in London Chart 5 | The effect of a separation of retail and investment banking It would enhance the competitiveness of my financial centre 26% it would have little or no effect on my financial centre 57% it would lead to a decrease in the competitiveness of my financial centre 17% Our next question was “If your local regulator restricted the activities of firms that are too big to fail, how would this affect your financial centre?” Over a third of respondents feel that greater regulatory involvement would decrease competitiveness in those centres affected: Several respondents blame regulators for allowing firms to become too big: Chart 6 | The effect of greater regulatory involvement on firms that are too big to fail It would enhance the competitiveness of my financial centre 27% It would have little or no effect on my financial centre 28% It would lead to a decrease in the competitiveness of my financial centre 36% There are no firms that are too big to fail in this financial centre 8% “Financial firms become too big to fail because they have regulatory protection! Enhancing competitiveness would ensure that firms don’t grow too big.” Financial Services Advisor based in Jersey The Global Financial Centres Index 11 9 We asked our respondents about the most likely outcome of the Eurozone crisis: Chart 7 | The most likely outcome of the eurozone crisis The Eurozone will lose members 29% The Eurozone will fragment 26% The Eurozone will consolidate into a single central bank and bond market 30% Other 15% Finally we asked about what would be required for a return to long-term financial system stability. Over 80% of respondents feel that this will require international co-operation: Chart 8 | A return to long-term financial system stability Will require multilateral international co-operation 82% Can be solved at a national level by national institutions 10% Cannot be achieved 8% 10 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Main Areas of Competitiveness The GFCI questionnaire asks about the most important factors for competitiveness. The number of times that each area is mentioned is summarised in Table 2: Table 2 | Main areas of competitiveness Area of competitiveness Taxation Business environment People General economic conditions Infrastructure Number of mentions 74 32 26 26 15 Main concerns Personal and corporate tax Stability and predictability Quality of staff Eurozone recession Air transport The GFCI questionnaire asks respondents to name the single regulatory change that would improve a financial centre’s competitiveness. Although a large number of possible changes were named, the four mentioned most often are shown in Table 3 below: Table 3 | Top four single regulatory changes Regulatory change Taxation Regulation Level playing field Business freedom / ease Number of mentions 49 41 32 30 Main issues Personal tax Fairness and predictability Competitiveness with others Ease of running a business The GFCI questionnaire also asks respondents how financial centres can best signal their long-term commitment to financial services. There were a large number of ‘signals’ mentioned but the four most common are shown in Table 4 below: Table 4 | Best signals of commitment to financial services Area of competitiveness Number of mentions 45 34 32 26 18 Stability and transparency of regulation Lack of corruption Taxation Lack of government interference Infrastructure development The Global Financial Centres Index 11 11 The GFCI questionnaire asks which centres are likely to become more significant in the next few years. Asia continues to feature very strongly and is where respondents expect to observe the most significant improvements in performance: Table 5 | The ten centres likely to become more significant Centres likely to become more significant Singapore Shanghai Hong Kong Toronto Sao Paulo Luxembourg Almaty Beijing Moscow Mumbai Number of mentions 42 35 33 20 15 14 14 11 11 11 “Tax is now the single biggest concern we have about London at the moment. The government needs to be really careful.” Director of Private Bank based in London The GFCI questionnaire also asks in which centres the respondents’ organisations are most likely to open offices over the next few years: Table 6 | The ten centres where new offices will be opened Centres where new offices will be opened Singapore Hong Kong London Shanghai Dubai Beijing Mumbai New York Luxembourg Calgary Number of mentions 17 14 11 8 6 5 5 5 4 3 12 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Financial Centre Profiles Using clustering and correlation analysis we have identified three key measures (axes) that determine a financial centre’s profile along different dimensions of competitiveness: ‘Diversity’– the breadth of industry sectors that flourish in a financial centre. We consider this ‘richness’ of the business environment to be measurable in a similar way to that of the natural environment and therefore, use a combination of biodiversity indices (calculated on the instrumental factors) to assess a centre’s diversity. A high score means that a centre is well diversified; a low diversity score reflects a less rich business environment. ‘Speciality’ - the depth within a financial centre of the following industry sectors: asset management, investment banking, insurance, professional services and wealth management. A centre’s ‘speciality’ performance is calculated from the difference between the GFCI rating and the industry sector ratings. In Table 7, ‘Diversity’ (Breadth) and ‘Speciality’ (Depth) are combined on one axis to create a two dimensional table of financial centre profiles. The 77 centres are assigned a profile on the basis of a set of rules for the three measures: how well connected a centre is, how broad its services are and how specialised it is. Connectivity Speciality Diversity ‘Connectivity’ – the extent to which a centre is well known around the world and how much non-resident professionals believe it is connected to other financial centres. Respondents are asked to assess only those centres with which they are personally familiar. A centre’s connectivity is assessed using a combination of ‘inbound’ assessment locations (the number of locations from which a particular centre receives assessments) and ‘outbound’ assessment locations (the number of other centres assessed by respondents from a particular centre). If the weighted assessments for a centre are provided by over 65% of other centres, this centre is deemed to be ‘Global’. If the ratings are provided by over 45% of other centres, this centre is deemed to be ‘Transnational’. The Global Financial Centres Index 11 13 Table 7 | GFCI 11 financial centre profiles Broad & deep Global leaders Chicago Frankfurt Hong Kong London Global New York Paris Tokyo Toronto Zurich Established Transnational Copenhagen Geneva Transnational Madrid Montreal Munich Sydney Vancouver Established Players Brussels Calgary Helsinki Lisbon Melbourne Mexico City Local Milan Prague Rome San Francisco Sao Paulo Stockholm Vienna Local Diversified Bangkok Warsaw Transnational Diversified Boston Istanbul Kuala Lumpur Washington DC Transnational Specialists Athens Dubai Edinburgh Glasgow Mumbai Qatar Shenzhen Local Specialists Abu Dhabi Bahamas Budapest Hamilton Malta Monaco Oslo Reykjavik Rio de Janeiro Riyadh St Petersburg Tallinn Transnational Contenders Bahrain British Virgin Islands Cayman Islands Gibraltar Guernsey Isle of Man Jersey Evolving Centres Buenos Aires Jakarta Johannesburg Manila Mauritius Osaka Taipei Wellington Singapore Relatively broad Global diversified Amsterdam Dublin Seoul Shanghai Relatively deep Global specialists Beijing Emerging Global contenders Luxembourg Moscow 14 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 This profile ‘map’ shows the nine Global Leaders (in the top left of the table) which have both broad and deep financial services activities and are connected with many other financial centres. This list includes London, New York and Hong Kong, the leading global financial centres. Seoul, Shanghai and Singapore are Global Diversified centres as they are equally well connected but do not exhibit the same depth in different sectors to be considered Global Leaders. The only Global Contenders are Moscow and Luxembourg which are assigned a global profile because there is widespread awareness of their activities, but their financial services are not currently sufficiently broad and deep for them to be considered leaders. The ‘movers’ since GFCI 10 include Shanghai (from Established Transnational to Global Diversified), Paris becoming a Global Leader (from Global Diversified), Montreal, Copenhagen and Munich becoming Established Transnational centres (from Transnational Diversified) and the European Centres of Helsinki, Lisbon, Rome and Stockholm all becoming Established Players from being Local Diversified and Local Specialist centres. Chart 9 below shows the profiles mapped against the GFCI 11 ranges: Chart 9 | Financial centre profiles mapped against GFCI 11 ranges 800 750 700 650 600 550 500 450 400 “It is interesting to see Moscow as a Global Contender – that is exactly what it is. The leaders in Moscow are putting a lot of effort in changing Moscow into a more established global player.” Asset Manager based in London The Global Financial Centres Index 11 15 European Centres Table 8 shows the top 20 European financial centres. The main centres of countries suffering in the Euro-crisis have all declined in the rankings. In the UK, Edinburgh and Glasgow see the largest falls in Europe (five places and eight places respectively). Frankfurt, Paris, Zurich and Geneva are amongst those European centres that have risen in the ratings. Ten of the top 20 European centres have declined in the ranks: Table 8 | The leading 20 European centres in GFCI 11 GFCI 11 rank London Zurich Frankfurt Geneva Munich Paris Luxembourg Stockholm Amsterdam Vienna Copenhagen Edinburgh Oslo Glasgow Helsinki Dublin Brussels Madrid Milan Warsaw 1 6 13 14 19 22 23 25 33 34 36 37 39 41 42 46 47 49 52 54 GFCI 11 rating 781 689 681 679 656 650 648 645 637 636 634 632 629 627 626 621 620 617 609 606 GFCI 10 rank 1 8 16 13 22 24 29 28 35 42 34 32 37 33 39 43 44 48 50 56 GFCI 10 rating 774 686 667 672 649 643 637 638 625 615 626 632 621 628 618 614 612 608 606 593 Change in rank – L 2 L 3 M -1 L 3 L 2 L 6 L 3 L 2 L 8 M -2 M -5 M -2 M -8 M -3 M -3 M -3 M -1 M -2 L 2 Change in rating L 7 L 2 L 14 L 7 L 7 L 7 L 11 L 12 L 21 L 7 L 8 – L 7 L 8 L 7 L 8 L 9 L 3 L 13 M -1 16 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Chart 10 | The leading European centres over GFCI editions 850 780 710 640 London ■ Zurich ■ Frankfurt ■ Geneva ■ Paris ■ 570 500 G G Examining the assessments given to each major centre is a useful means of assessing the relative strength and weakness of their reputations in different regions. It is important to note that assessments given to a centre by people based there are excluded from the GFCI model to eliminate ‘home preference’. The charts below show the difference between overall mean assessments by region. The additional vertical line shows the mean if all assessments from the whole of the home region are removed: Chart 11 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – London Europe (34.3%) Mean without European assessments FC G I1 G I2 FC FC G I3 FC G North America (10.5%) Latin America (0.2%) Middle East/Africa (1.4%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 G I4 FC G I7 FC G G I6 FC G I FC I FC I FC I FC I5 10 11 London’s overall average assessment is 780. The chart indicates that London is well regarded in North America (and by the few respondents in Latin America) but less well rated by respondents from offshore centres, the Middle East/Africa and Asia/Pacific. 8 9 Offshore (27%) Asia/Pacific (26.5%) The Global Financial Centres Index 11 17 Zurich’s overall average assessment is 717, up from 702 in GFCI 10. North American assessments of Zurich together with those from the Middle East & Africa are strong. Offshore and European respondents are much closer to the mean. Asia/Pacific respondents are less favourable. Chart 12 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Zurich Mean without European assessments Europe (40.4%) Offshore (32.2%) Asia/Pacific (17.8%) North America (7.6%) Latin America (0.5%) Middle East/Africa (1.5%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Frankfurt’s overall average assessment is 709 up from 693 in GFCI 10. Frankfurt is given lower assessments by people based in offshore locations and Latin America. “Frankfurt has benefited from the leadership that Angela Merkel has shown in the Euro crisis.” Asset Manager based in Zurich Chart 13 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Frankfurt Mean without European assessments Europe (45.3%) Offshore (10.8%) Asia/Pacific (29.8%) -155 North America (11.4%) Latin America (0.3%) Middle East/Africa (2.4%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 The overall average assessment for Paris is 664 up from 637 in GFCI 10. Paris is given lower assessments by other European respondents and the offshore centres but gets more favourable responses from the Asia/Pacific region. Chart 14 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Paris Mean without European assessments Europe (42.3%) Offshore (12.4%) Asia/Pacific (31.6%) North America (11.1%) Latin America (0.2%) Middle East/Africa (2.4%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 18 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Asia/Pacific Centres GFCI 11 ratings have, on average, risen since GFCI 10. In Asia however, the ratings of some of the leading centres have shown marked decreases. Hong Kong, Shanghai and Beijing in particular have shown declines. However the Asian/Pacific region still has five centres in the overall top ten – more than Europe and the Americas: Shenzhen has now fallen outside the top 30 for the first time since entering the GFCI. Table 9 | The leading ten Asia/Pacific centres in GFCI 11 GFCI 11 rank Hong Kong Singapore Tokyo Shanghai Seoul Sydney Melbourne Osaka Beijing Taipei 3 4 5 8 9 16 20 24 26 27 GFCI 11 rating 754 729 693 687 686 674 653 647 644 643 GFCI 10 rank 3 4 6 5 11 15 18 26 19 23 GFCI 10 rating 770 735 695 724 679 669 656 641 655 645 Change in rank – – 1 M -2 L 2 M -1 M -2 L 2 M -7 M -4 Change in rating M-16 M -6 M -2 L 7 L 5 M -3 L 6 M -2 M-11 M-37 Chart 15 | The leading Asian centres over GFCI editions 800 750 700 650 600 550 500 450 400 Hong Kong ■ Singapore ■ Tokyo ■ Shanghai ■ Beijing ■ Seoul ■ Shenzhen ■ G G FC G I1 G G I2 FC I7 FC G G FC G I3 G I4 FC G FC G I5 I FC I FC I6 FC I FC 8 I FC 9 10 11 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 19 The mean rating of Hong Kong is 782 (down from 790 in GFCI 10), the mean for Singapore is 764 (761 in GFCI 10) and the mean for Tokyo is 739 (718 in GFCI 10). Responses from North America, Latin America and the Middle East/Africa are more positive than average about Hong Kong and Singapore. Responses from Europe and the offshore centres are less positive than average about Asian centres. “Seoul has identified that their city is less attractive to live in for Western expats than they imagined. They are beginning to change that but still have a long way to go.” Asset Manager based in Hong Kong Chart 16 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Hong Kong Europe (25%) Offshore (21.9%) Mean without Asian assessments Asia/Pacific (41.9%) North America (9.5%) Latin America (0.4%) Middle East/Africa (1.4%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chart 17 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Singapore Europe (26%) Offshore (20.9%) Mean without Asian assessments Asia/Pacific (42%) North America (9.2%) Latin America (0.4%) Middle East/Africa (1.6%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chart 18 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Tokyo Mean without Asian assessments Europe (23.9%) Offshore (6.8%) Asia/Pacific (54.5%) North America (12%) Latin America (0.7%) Middle East/Africa (2.2%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 20 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 North American Centres North American and Latin American centres show a mixed performance in GFCI 11. Table 10 | The leading North American and Latin American Centres in GFCI 11 GFCI 11 rank New York Chicago Toronto Boston San Francisco Washington D.C. Vancouver Montreal Calgary Sao Paulo Mexico City Rio de Janeiro Buenos Aires 2 7 10 11 12 15 17 18 28 50 51 53 67 GFCI 11 rating 772 688 685 684 683 677 667 658 642 612 610 608 577 49 47 53 63 607 609 602 579 GFCI 10 rank 2 7 10 12 9 14 17 20 GFCI 10 rating 773 692 680 678 681 670 661 652 Change in rank – – – L1 M-3 M-1 – L2 New M-1 M-4 – M-4 Change in rating M-1 M-5 L5 L6 L2 L7 L6 L6 New L5 L1 L6 M-2 New York, Chicago and Toronto retain their positions in the GFCI 11 top ten. Boston and Montreal rose in the ranks. Calgary is a new entrant into the GFCI in 28th place. Canada now has four centres in the GFCI, all within the top 30. Chart 19 below shows New York maintaining its leadership in North America: Chart 19 | The leading North American and Latin American centres over GFCI editions 850 800 750 700 650 600 550 500 450 400 New York ■ Chicago ■ Toronto ■ Boston ■ Montreal ■ Sao Paulol ■ Buenos Aires ■ G G G I2 FC FC G I1 FC G I3 G I4 FC G FC G I5 G I6 FC G I7 FC G I FC I FC I FC 8 I FC 9 11 10 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 21 The difference between regional assessments for some of the major North American centres is shown below: Chart 20 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – New York Mean without North American assessments Europe (33%) Offshore (18.3%) Asia/Pacific (31.5%) North America (15%) Latin America (0.3%) Middle East/Africa (1.9%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 The overall average assessment for New York is 764 down from 801 in GFCI 10. New York benefits from strong North American support. Offshore centres assess New York less positively, possibly due to US clampdowns on offshore activities. Chart 21 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Chicago Mean without North American assessments Europe (27.7%) Offshore (9.7%) Asia/Pacific (38.6%) North America (21.4%) Latin America (0.4%) Middle East/Africa (2.2%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chicago has an overall average assessment of 726 up from 710 in GFCI 10. Assessments of Chicago show that respondents from the Asia/Pacific region and Europe gave the city a less favourable score than average. 22 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Respondents from North America gave Toronto and Montreal scores higher than average, whilst respondents from elsewhere gave lower scores. Chart 22 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Toronto Mean without North American assessments Europe (23.3%) Offshore (19%) Asia/Pacific (22.2%) North America (32.5%) Middle East/Africa (3%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chart 23 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Montreal Europe (16.6%) Mean without North American assessments Offshore (17.4%) Asia/Pacific (17%) North America (47%) Middle East/Africa (2%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 “Toronto has been the leading centre in Canada for a while now but Montreal and Vancouver are also getting stronger – particularly in asset management.” Asset Manager based in Boston The Global Financial Centres Index 11 23 Middle East/African Centres Of the four Middle Eastern centres in the GFCI, Dubai has overtaken Qatar to regain the status of leading Middle Eastern centre in GFCI 11. We believe that Qatar has strong underlying fundamentals to challenge Dubai. Abu Dhabi is a new entrant to the GFCI and has come in just above Bahrain. Johannesburg and Istanbul do not yet fulfil their potential. We certainly expect Istanbul to become more significant in the medium term. Table 11 | The Middle East/African centres in GFCI 11 GFCI 11 rank Dubai Qatar Abu Dhabi Johannesburg Bahrain Istanbul Riyadh 29 38 48 55 57 61 70 GFCI 11 rating 641 630 618 603 600 590 572 52 55 62 66 603 596 580 575 GFCI 10 rank 36 30 GFCI 10 rating 622 636 Change in rank L 7 M -8 New M -3 M -2 L 1 M -4 Change in rating L19 M -7 New – L 4 M -3 L10 Chart 24 | Selected Middle East/African centres over GFCI editions 700 650 600 550 500 450 Dubai ■ Qatar ■ Johannesburg ■ Bahrain ■ Istanbul ■ 400 G I1 FC G G I1 FC G G G I7 FC G G G I FC 2 FC G FC G FC I6 FC I4 FC I3 FC FC I1 I5 I9 I8 1 0 24 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 There is a mixed pattern of assessments for the Middle Eastern centres. Dubai gets strong support from Asia/Pacific and below average scores from the offshore centres. Qatar does well with respondents from Asia/Pacific and also North America. Istanbul is well supported by the Middle East and North America but has a lower reputation amongst European respondents: Chart 25 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Dubai Mean without Middle Eastern assessments Europe (28.7%) Offshore (32.1%) Asia/Pacific (30.2%) North America (5.7%) Latin America (0.2%) Middle East/Africa (3%) 722 0 50 100 150 -150 -100 -50 Chart 26 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Qatar Mean without Middle Eastern assessments Europe (32.4%) Offshore (28.8%) Asia/Pacific (31.7%) North America (2.9%) Middle East/Africa (4.3%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chart 27 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Istanbul Mean without Middle Eastern assessments Europe (31.4%) Offshore (8.2%) Asia/Pacific (46.5%) North America (7.5%) Latin America (0.6%) Middle East/Africa (5.7%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 25 Johannesburg is well regarded by respondents from the Asia/Pacific centres but not from elsewhere. Chart 28 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Johannesburg Mean without Middle Eastern assessments Europe (27.7%) Offshore (41.9%) Asia/Pacific (23%) North America (6.3%) Middle East/Africa (1%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 “Dubai is still in the duldrums but watch Qatar with interest over the next couple of years – I think it has much to offer.” Investment Manager based in London and the Middle East 26 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Offshore Centres Offshore centres have suffered significant reputational damage in the past four years. GFCI 10 showed that many of these centres’ reputations were starting to recover. GFCI 11 shows that this recovery is gaining pace. All the top offshore centres have made gains in GFCI 11 ratings. Jersey and Guernsey remain the leading offshore centres: Table12 | Top ten offshore centres in GFCI 11 GFCI 11 rank Jersey Guernsey Cayman Islands Hamilton Isle of Man British Virgin Islands Monaco Gibraltar Mauritius Malta Bahamas 21 31 40 43 44 45 60 63 66 72 75 GFCI 11 rating 652 639 628 625 624 623 593 587 578 568 550 GFCI 10 rank 21 31 46 41 40 45 59 58 68 70 72 GFCI 10 rating 650 635 610 616 617 611 583 584 571 568 545 Change in rank – – L 7 M -2 M -4 – M -1 M -5 L 2 M -2 M -3 Change in rating L 2 L 4 L 9 L 7 L18 A significant proportion of the assessments of offshore centres are coming from other offshore centres. Jersey and Guernsey get good assessments from the other offshore centres whereas the Cayman Islands do less well from the other offshore centres and better from North American and Asia/Pacific respondents. L12 L10 L 3 L 7 – L 5 Chart 29 | The top offshore centres over GFCI Editions 700 675 650 625 600 575 550 525 500 Jersey ■ Guernsey ■ Hamilton ■ Isle of Man ■ Cayman Islands ■ British Virgin Islands ■ G I1 FC G G “We are doing business in Jersey and Guernsey but our business with Luxembourg and Geneva has increased most strongly.” Trust Fund Manager based in Paris G I1 FC G G G G I FC 2 FC G I7 FC G FC G FC I4 FC I3 FC I6 FC FC I1 I5 I9 I8 0 1 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 27 Chart 30 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Jersey Mean without European assessments Europe (30.3%) Offshore (57.7%) Asia/Pacific (6.2%) North America (4.2%) Latin America (0.2%) Middle East/Africa (1.3%) 324 -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 Chart 31 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Guernsey Mean without European assessments Europe (31.1%) Offshore (59.3%) Asia/Pacific (4.9%) North America (3.5%) Latin America (0.2%) 298 Middle East/Africa (1%) -100 -50 0 50 100 150 -164 -185 -150 Chart 32 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Cayman Islands Mean without European assessments Europe (29.6%) Offshore (50.6%) Asia/Pacific (12.5%) North America (5.9%) Latin America (0.2%) Middle East/Africa (1.2%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 381 Hamilton has a different business mix than the other offshore centres with its speciality being reinsurance. It might therefore be expected to have a different profile amongst respondents and is well regarded by North American and European respondents. Chart 33 | Assessments by region – difference from the mean – Hamilton Europe (31.5%) Mean without European assessments Offshore (49.4%) Asia/Pacific (9.6%) North America (8.8%) Latin America (0.3%) Middle East/Africa (0.5%) -150 -100 -50 0 50 100 150 180 28 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 The GFCI World 76 See inset detailed map 28 17 7 12 10 15 18 2 11 43 75 51 40 45 42 39 41 37 44 46 31 21 25 71 36 1 33 54 47 56 23 13 22 19 34 6 74 14 52 60 58 77 63 72 73 50 53 67 49 68 61 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 29 65 26 9 8 57 29 70 38 48 64 59 35 4 62 69 32 3 27 24 5 66 55 16 20 30 The numbers on the map show the GFCI ranking of the relevant centre Broad and deep Global leaders Established transnational Established players Relatively broad Global diversified Transnational diversified Local diversified Relatively deep Global specialists Transnational specialists Local nodes Emerging Global contenders Transnational contenders Evolving centres 30 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Industry Sectors Industry sector sub-indices are created by building the GFCI 11 statistical model using only the questionnaire responses from respondents working in the relevant industry sectors. The GFCI 11 dataset has been used to produce separate sub-indices for the Banking, Asset Management, Insurance, Professional Services, Government & Regulatory and Wealth Management & Private Banking sectors. London appears at the top of four of the six subindices. New York tops the Banking sub-index and Hong Kong tops the Insurance sub-index. Table 13 below shows the top ten ranked financial centres in the industry sector subindices. The top four centres in the GFCI 11 overall index are top of the Asset Management, Banking, Government & Regulatory and Professional Services sub-indices. In the Insurance sub-index Shanghai is (surprisingly) up in fourth place. The top eight places in this sub-index are filled by the top eight centres in the main GFCI. The Asian centres are well placed in the Insurance sub-index with four centres in the top seven, and in the Banking sub-index with three in the top five places. The Wealth Management sub-index was introduced in GFCI 8. It is not surprising to see the leading global wealth management centres of Geneva, Toronto, Zurich and Jersey so high in this sub-index. These centres are not the largest financial services centres and wealth management is a sector where specialist centres compete successfully with much larger centres. Table 13 | GFCI 11 industry sector sub-indices Top 10 Rank Asset management London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Boston (-) Banking Government & regulatory London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (+1) Singapore (-1) Frankfurt (-) Paris (-) Tokyo (+1) Munich (+1) Chicago (-3) Toronto (+2) Insurance Professional services London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Zurich (+5) Toronto (+2) Chicago (-1) Geneva (+2) Wealth management/ private banking London (-) New York (+1) Hong Kong (+2) Geneva (-2) Singapore (+2) Zurich (-1) Toronto (-3) Jersey (-) 1 2 3 4 5 5 7 8 9 10 New York (-) London (1) Hong Kong (-2) Singapore (-) Tokyo (-) Hong Kong (-) New York (+1) London (+1) Shanghai (-2) Singapore (-) Tokyo (-) Chicago (+1) Zurich (+8) Frankfurt (+9) Boston (+1) San Francisco (+3) Chicago (+2) Toronto (+1) Chicago (-1) Tokyo (-3) Zurich (-1) Zurich (+1) Frankfurt (+2) Toronto (+1) Sydney (+2) San Francisco (-4) Vancouver (-) Boston (-3) Tokyo (+2) “Switzerland has such a good reputation for private banking – with the emphasis on private – but I fear this might disappear as the US regulators start to apply more pressure.” Asset Manager based in Zurich The Global Financial Centres Index 11 31 Five Areas of Competitiveness The instrumental factors used in the GFCI 11 model are grouped into five key areas of competitiveness (People, Business Environment, Market Access, Infrastructure and General Competitiveness). The GFCI 11 factor assessment model is run with one set of instrumental factors at a time. Table 14 shows the top ten ranked centres in each sub-index: Table 14 | GFCI 11 Area of competitiveness sub-indices – Top 10 Rank 1 2 3 4 5 5 7 8 9 10 People London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Tokyo (+1) Chicago (+1) Seoul (-) Shanghai (-3) Boston (+2) Zurich (-) Business environment Market access London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Seoul (+1) Chicago (-1) Tokyo (+1) Zurich (+2) Toronto (+1) Geneva (+2) London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Tokyo (+1) Zurich (+2) Seoul (+1) Chicago (+2) Shanghai (-4) Toronto (-) Infrastructure London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Tokyo (+1) Seoul (-1) Zurich (+2) Chicago (-) Geneva (+8) Frankfurt (+6) General competitiveness London (-) New York (-) Hong Kong (-) Singapore (-) Seoul (-) Tokyo (+1) Chicago (+1) Zurich (+6) Toronto (+3) Shanghai (-4) The top four financial centres in GFCI 11 – London, New York, Hong Kong and Singapore – also share the top four places in each of these sub indices (as they have in the past three editions of GFCI). This confirms their strength in all five areas of competitiveness. It also confirms our belief that a genuinely top global centre is competitive in all areas – successful people like to live and work in successful centres. Seoul is in fifth place in both the General Competitiveness and Infrastructure sub-indices and within the top seven in all five of these subindices – it is now up two places in the overall GFCI and is in ninth place overall. Toronto remains in the top ten in the Business Environment, Market Access and General Competitiveness sub-indices. “Seoul is making strides to be a more welcoming city to Westerners but it still has a way to go.” Investment Banker based in New York 32 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Size of Organisation It is useful to look at how the leading centres are viewed by respondents working for different sizes of organisation. Chart 34 | Top three centres – average assessments by respondent’s organisation size Chart 34 above shows that London is assessed more highly than both New York and Hong Kong by respondents from small organisations (with fewer than 100 employees). At the other end of the scale New York and Hong Kong are assessed slightly higher than London by respondents from organisations with over 5,000 employees. In the mid-sized organisations (500 to 1,000 employees) Hong Kong is a clear leader from London and New York. “London is still the best base for us for our international business.” Director of Small Mergers and Acquisitions Consulting Business based in London “You have to be in New York, London and Hong Kong if you have aspirations to be seen as global.” Investment Banker based in Hong Kong The Global Financial Centres Index 11 33 Reputation In the GFCI model, one way to look at reputation is to examine the difference between the average assessment given to a centre and its overall rating (the average assessment adjusted to reflect the instrumental factors). If a centre has a higher average assessment than the GFCI 11 rating this indicates that respondents’ perceptions of a centre are more favourable than the quantitative measures alone would suggest. This may be due to strong marketing or general awareness. Table 15 below shows the 20 centres with the greatest positive difference between average assessment and the GFCI rating: Table 15 | Top 20 centres assessments & ratings – reputational advantage Centre Seoul Singapore Shanghai New York Hong Kong Toronto Zurich Geneva London San Francisco Chicago Vancouver Tokyo Frankfurt Kuala Lumpur Sydney Boston Jersey Stockholm Washington DC Melbourne Average assessment 768 763 721 803 785 712 713 703 803 705 708 687 712 699 653 690 699 666 656 681 653 GFCI 11 rating 686 729 687 772 754 685 689 679 781 683 688 667 693 681 635 674 684 652 645 677 653 Reputational advantage 82 34 34 31 31 27 24 24 22 22 20 20 19 18 18 16 15 14 11 4 0 34 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Overall reputational advantage has remained fairly stable since GFCI 10. It is notable that four of the top five financial centres by reputational advantage are Asian. It should be stressed that for these centres a large proportion of favourable assessments came from other Asian centres rather than from non-Asian centres. Table 16 below shows the ten centres with the lowest reputational advantage – an indication that respondents’ perceptions of a centre are less favourable than the quantitative measures alone would suggest: Table 16 | GFCI 11 Bottom 10 centres assessments and ratings – reputational advantage Centre Athens Tallinn Budapest Lisbon Reykjavik Riyadh Manila Moscow Warsaw Glasgow Average assessment 353 460 454 484 432 490 495 506 541 566 GFCI 11 rating 468 570 552 575 517 572 573 583 606 627 Reputational advantage -115 -110 -98 -91 -85 -82 -78 -77 -65 -61 It is no surprise to us that Athens tops this list or that Lisbon and Reykjavik are so high up. “The Eurozone continues to suffer from reputational damage. It takes years to gain a good reputation and no time at all to lose it!” International Banker based in Frankfurt The Global Financial Centres Index 11 35 Stability The GFCI 11 model allows for analysis of the financial centres with the most volatile competitiveness. Chart 35 below contrasts the ‘spread’ or variance of the individual assessments given to each of the top 40 centres with the sensitivity to changes in the instrumental factors. Chart 35 shows three bands of financial centres. The ‘unpredictable’ centres in the top right of the chart, Shenzhen, Seoul, Copenhagen and Qatar, have a high sensitivity to changes in the instrumental factors and a high variance of assessments. These centres have high potential volatility of the top GFCI centres. It is interesting to note that the centres classed as unpredictable in previous editions of the GFCI have shown the greatest movements in ratings over the past year. A good example is Wellington, being classed as unpredictable in GFCI 10 and now established in the dynamic band. The ‘stable’ centres in the bottom left of the chart, London, Hong Kong, New York and Singapore, have a low sensitivity to changes in the instrumental factors and a low variance of assessments. These centres are likely to exhibit the lowest volatility in future GFCI ratings. Looking back at recent GFCI ratings, these centres are consistently in the top ten and we would not be surprised to see them remaining there for a while yet. It is interesting to see Beijing in this band – even though it is in 26th place in GFCI 11 it appears to exhibit signs of stability. The centres in the middle band might be classed as ‘dynamic’ and have the potential to move in either direction. Chart 35 | Variance of assessments versus sensitivity to instrumental factors DYNAMIC Shenzhen Qatar Seoul UNPREDICTABLE Taipei Stockholm Sydney Increasing variance of assessments Copenhagen Zurich Toronto Shanghai San Francisco Vancover Montreal Melbourne Vienna Wellington Calgary Oslo Geneva Boston Frankfurt Beijing Singapore Hong Kong Dubai Chicago Paris Osaka Kuala Lumpur Tokyo Amsterdam New York Washington DC Edinburgh Guernsey Munich Cayman Islands Luxembourg Jersey STABLE London Increasing sensitivity of instrumental factors 36 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Appendices 1. Assessment Details Table 17 | Assessment details Centre GFCI 11 Number of assessments 1,384 1,162 1,068 828 575 490 646 505 591 422 350 468 378 594 626 402 280 157 655 247 613 149 163 156 262 218 686 68 180 549 84 592 142 510 113 484 594 456 200 Average assessment 734 764 759 753 751 711 710 726 731 684 705 693 705 703 713 701 685 655 658 709 665 664 733 669 700 672 640 501 656 668 631 665 604 636 579 593 603 659 604 Standard deviation of assessments 166 179 185 184 205 176 189 188 228 196 184 195 184 182 216 196 195 212 208 211 206 192 215 199 194 181 198 217 191 224 227 230 210 235 195 225 199 244 239 Centre GFCI 11 Number of assessments 743 352 391 117 139 534 208 387 262 270 235 422 156 93 125 221 144 191 103 255 229 159 235 200 376 113 113 135 271 108 359 258 115 74 319 56 157 181 Average assessment 593 605 630 616 602 593 596 643 544 711 600 601 617 584 581 589 637 614 610 592 597 610 603 589 569 560 572 613 607 570 563 603 588 601 578 557 496 454 Standard deviation of assessments 214 236 234 188 216 228 216 208 189 200 215 208 209 226 245 187 223 196 220 184 204 232 196 218 202 225 219 217 234 206 205 273 202 257 210 216 271 211 London NewYork Hong Kong Singapore Tokyo Zurich Shanghai Chicago Seoul Toronto Boston San Francisco Frankfurt Geneva Washington DC Sydney Vancouver Montreal Munich Melbourne Jersey Paris Luxembourg Osaka Stockholm Beijing Taipei Calgary Dubai Wellington Guernsey Shenzhen Amsterdam Vienna Kuala Lumpur Copenhagen Edinburgh Qatar Oslo 781 772 754 729 693 688 687 687 686 685 684 683 681 679 677 674 667 658 656 653 652 650 648 647 645 644 643 642 641 640 639 638 637 636 636 634 632 629 628 Cayman Islands Glasgow Helsinki Hamilton Isle of Man British Virgin Islands Dublin Brussels Abu Dhabi Madrid Sao Paulo Mexico City Milan Rio de Janeiro Warsaw Johannesburg Prague Bahrain Rome Bangkok Monaco Istanbul Jakarta Gibraltar Mumbai Moscow Mauritius Buenos Aires Lisbon Manila Riyadh Tallinn Malta St Petersburg Budapest Bahamas Reykjavik Athens 628 627 626 625 624 623 621 620 618 617 612 610 609 608 606 603 602 600 596 594 593 590 588 587 584 583 578 577 575 573 572 570 568 567 552 550 517 468 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 37 2. Respondents’ Details Table 18 | Respondents by industry sector Sector Asset Management Banking Government & Regulatory Insurance Professional Services Wealth Management Other Total Total 181 424 90 265 305 128 385 1,778 % 10.2% 23.8% 5.1% 14.9% 17.2% 7.2% 21.7% Table 19 | Respondents by size of organisation Number of employees worldwide Fewer than 100 100 to 500 500 to 1,000 1,000 to 2,000 2,000 to 5,000 More than 5,000 Unspecified Total Total 486 279 186 91 153 566 17 1,778 % 27.3% 15.7% 10.5% 5.1% 8.6% 31.8% 1.0% Table 20 | Respondents by location Location Asia/Pacific Europe Latin America Middle East/Africa North America Offshore Total Total 604 527 6 27 195 419 1,778 % 34.0% 29.6% 0.3% 1.5% 11.0% 23.6% 3. Methodology The GFCI provides ratings for financial centres calculated by a ‘factor assessment model’ that uses two distinct sets of input: • Instrumental factors (external indices that contribute to competitiveness): objective evidence of competitiveness was sought from a wide variety of comparable sources. For example, evidence about the infrastructure competitiveness of a financial centre is drawn from a survey of property and an index of occupancy costs. Evidence about a fair and just business environment is drawn from a corruption perception index and an opacity index. A total of 80 external sources were used in GFCI 11. Not all financial centres are represented in all the external sources, and the statistical model takes account of these gaps. • Financial centre assessments: by means of an online questionnaire, running continuously since 2007, we use 26,853 financial centre assessments drawn from 1,778 respondents in GFCI 11. 6,094 assessments from 399 respondents have been gathered since GFCI 10. The 80 instrumental factors were selected because the features they measure contribute in various ways to the fourteen competitiveness factors identified in previous research2. These are shown in Table 21. Table 21 | Competitiveness factors and their relative importance Competitiveness factors The availability of skilled personnel The regulatory environment Access to international financial markets The availability of business infrastructure Access to customers A fair and just business environment Government responsiveness The corporate tax regime Operational costs Access to suppliers of professional services Quality of life Culture & language Quality / availability of commercial property The personal tax regime Rank 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 2 ‘The Competitive Position of London as a Global Financial Centre’, Z/Yen Limited, The Corporation of London, 2005 38 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Financial centres are added to the GFCI model when they receive five or more mentions in the online questionnaire in response to the question: “Are there any financial centres that might become significantly more important over the next 2 to 3 years?” A centre is only given a GFCI rating and ranking if it receives more than 200 assessments from other centres in the online survey. At the beginning of our work on the GFCI, a number of guidelines were set out. Additional Instrumental Factors are added to the GFCI model when relevant and meaningful ones are discovered: • indices should come from a reputable body and be derived by a sound methodology; • indices should be readily available (ideally in the public domain) and be regularly updated; • updates to the indices are collected and collated every six months; • no weightings are applied to indices; • indices are entered into the GFCI model as directly as possible, whether this is a rank, a derived score, a value, a distribution around a mean or a distribution around a benchmark; • if a factor is at a national level, the score will be used for all centres in that country; nationbased factors will be avoided if financial centre (city)-based factors are available; • if an index has multiple values for a city or nation, the most relevant value is used (and the method for judging relevance is noted); • if an index is at a regional level, the most relevant allocation of scores to each centre is made (and the method for judging relevance is noted); • if an index does not contain a value for a particular city, a blank is entered against that centre (no average or mean is used). Only indices which have values for at least one third of the financial centres (currently 26) will be included. Creating the GFCI does not involve totaling or averaging scores across instrumental factors. An approach involving totaling and averaging would involve a number of difficulties: • indices are published in a variety of different forms: an average or base point of 100 with scores above and below this; a simple ranking; actual values (e.g. $ per square foot of occupancy costs); a composite ‘score’; • indices would have to be normalised, e.g. in some indices a high score is positive while in others a low score is positive; • not all centres are included in all indices; • the indices would have to be weighted. The guidelines for financial centre assessments by respondents are: • responses are collected via an online questionnaire which runs continuously. A link to this questionnaire is emailed to the target list of respondents at regular intervals and other interested parties can fill this in by following the link given in the GFCI publications; • financial centre assessments will be included in the GFCI model for 24 months after they have been received; • respondents rating fewer than 3 or more than half of the centres are excluded from the model; • respondents who do not say where they work are excluded; • financial centre assessments from the month when the GFCI is created are given full weighting and earlier responses are given a reduced weighting on a log scale. The Global Financial Centres Index 11 39 Chart 36 | Log scale for time weightings 1.00 0.8 The financial centre assessments and instrumental factors are used to build a predictive model of centre competitiveness using a support vector machine (SVM). The SVM used for the GFCI is PropheZy – Z/Yen’s proprietary system. SVMs are based upon statistical techniques that classify and model complex historic data in order to make predictions of new data. SVMs work well on discrete, categorical data but also handle continuous numerical or time series data. The SVM used for the GFCI provides information about the confidence with which each specific classification is made and the likelihood of other possible classifications. A factor assessment model is built using the centre assessments from responses to the online questionnaire. Assessments from respondents’ home centres are excluded from the factor assessment model to remove home bias. The model then predicts how respondents would have assessed centres they are not familiar with, by answering questions such as: Log multiple 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -2 3 -2 2 -2 9 -1 0 -2 1 8 -1 7 -1 6 -1 4 -1 5 -1 3 -1 Months 1 -1 2 -1 -9 -7 -2 -1 0 -4 -3 -5 If an investment banker gives Singapore and Sydney certain assessments then, based on the relevant data for Singapore, Sydney and Paris, how would that person assess Paris? Or If a pension fund manager gives Edinburgh and Munich a certain assessment then, based on the relevant data for Edinburgh, Munich and Zurich, how would that person assess Zurich? Financial centre predictions from the SVM are re-combined with actual financial centre assessments (except those from the respondents’ home centres) to produce the GFCI – a set of financial centre ratings. The GFCI is dynamically updated either by updating and adding to the instrumental factors or through new financial centre assessments. These updates permit, for instance, a recently changed index of rental costs to affect the competitiveness rating of the centres. 0 -1 -8 -6 40 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 The process of creating the GFCI is outlined diagrammatically below. Chart 36 | The GFCI process Instrumental Factor Instrumental Factor Instrumental Factor Competitiveness Factor Competitiveness Factor Competitiveness Factor Competitiveness Factor Instrumental Factor Competitiveness Factor Instrumental Factor Update Regular Online Survey of Financial Centre Assessments Change in Financial Centre Assessments Instrumental Factor Prediction Engine – PropheZy Updated GFCI published It is worth drawing attention to a few consequences of basing the GFCI on instrumental factors and questionnaire responses. • several indices can be used for each competitive factor; • a strong international group of ‘raters’ has developed as the GFCI progresses; • sector-specific ratings are available - using the business sectors represented by questionnaire respondents. This makes it possible to rate London as competitive in Insurance (for instance) while less competitive in Asset Management (for instance); • the factor assessment model can be queried in a ‘what if’ mode – “how much would London rental costs need to fall in order to increase London’s ranking against New York?” Part of the process of building the GFCI is extensive sensitivity testing to changes in factors of competitiveness and financial centre assessments. There are over ten million data points in the current model. The accuracy of predictions given by the SVM are regularly tested against actual assessments. The Global Financial Centres Index 11 41 4. Instrumental Factors Table 22 shows how closely instrumental factor rankings correlate with the GFCI 11 rankings for the top 20 instrumental factors: Table 22 | Top 20 instrumental factors by correlation with GFCI 11 Instrumental factor MA2 Centres of Commerce Index G1 World Competitiveness Scoreboard MA18 Credit Ratings G2 Global Competitiveness Index G12 Global Power City Index BE16 Banking Industry Country Risk Assessments G14 Global Cities Index G8 Global Innovation Index MA1 Capital Access Index G13 World Cities Survey MA3 The Access Opportunities Index I12 Global Air Travel Connectivity BE18 Political Risk G17 Innovation Cities Global Index I5 E – Readiness Score I9 Quality of Roads MA5 Capitalisation of Stock Exchanges BE1 Business Environment I8 Quality of Ground Transport Network BE21 Financial Secrecy Index Correlation measured by R2 0.599 0.562 0.534 0.509 0.506 0.451 0.436 0.429 0.378 0.354 0.342 0.332 0.315 0.292 0.287 0.276 0.276 0.269 0.262 0.260 It is interesting (but perhaps unsurprising) to see that the broader measures of competitiveness seem to act as good indicators for financial centre competitiveness. Four of the top five most highly correlated instrumental factors are all broad measures of competitiveness rather than being specific to financial services. This indicates that cities that are successful at most things are likely to be very competitive financial centres. A full list of instrumental factors is shown overleaf. 42 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Table 23 | People related instrumental factors Instrumental factor Source Website www.worldbank.org/education www.worldbank.org/education http://www.henleyglobal.com/citizenship/visa-restrictions/ http://hdr.undp.org http://www.citymayors.com/economics/usb-purchasing-power.html www.mercerhr.com http://www.happyplanetindex.org/explore/global /index.html http://www.knightfrank.com/wealthreport/ www.mercerhr.com http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-andanalysis/ www.euromonitor.org www.bestplaces.net NEW Updated since GFCI 10 Graduates in Social Science Business and Law World Bank Gross Tertiary Education Ratio Visa Restrictions Index Human Development Index Citizens Purchasing Power Quality of Living Survey Happy Planet Index Number of High Net Worth Individuals Personal Safety Index Homicide Rates World’s Top Tourism Destinations Average Days with Precipitation per Year World Bank Henley & Partners UN Development Programme City Mayors Mercer HR New Economics Foundation (NEF) City Bank & Knight Frank Mercer HR UN Office of Drugs and Crime Euromonitor Archive Sperling’s Best Places Table 24 | Business environment related instrumental factors Instrumental factor Business Environment Ease of Doing Business Index Operational Risk Rating Real Interest Rate Projected City Economic Growth Global Services Location Index Opacity Index Corruption Perceptions Index Wage Comparison Index Corporate Tax Rates Employee Effective Tax Rates Personal Tax Rates Total Tax Receipts (as % of GDP) Bilateral Tax Information Exchange Agreements Economic Freedom of the World Banking Industry Country Risk Assessments Government Debt as Percentage of GDP Political Risk Index Global Peace Index City GDP Rank Financial Secrecy Index Source EIU The World Bank EIU World Bank Price Waterhouse Cooper AT Kearney Milken Institute Transparency International UBS Price Waterhouse Coopers Price Waterhouse Coopers OECD OECD OECD Fraser Institute Standard & Poors CIA World Fact Book Exclusive Analysis Ltd The Institute of Economics and Peace Foreign Policy Magazine Tax Justice Network http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/FR.INR.RINR https://www.ukmediacentre.pwc.com/content/ detail.aspx?releaseid=3421&newsareaid=2 www.atkearney.com www.milkeninstitute.org/publications www.transparency.org/publications www.ubs.com n/a n/a www.oecd.org http://oberon.sourceoecd.org http://www.oecd.org www.freetheworld.com/release.html http://www2.standardandpoors.com https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/theworld-factbook/rankorder/2186rank.html http://www.exclusive-analysis.com/ http://www.visionofhumanity.org/infocenter/global-peace-index-2011/ http://www.foreignpolicy.com/node/373401 http://www.financialsecrecyindex.com/ NEW NEW Website www.economist.com/markets/rankings www.doingbusiness.org/economyrankings Updated since GFCI 10 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 43 Table 25 | Market access related instrumental factors Instrumental factor Capital Access Index Centres of Commerce Access Opportunities Index Securitisation Capitalisation of Stock Exchanges Value of Share Trading Volume of Share Trading Broad Stock Index Levels Value of Bond Trading Volume of Stock Options Trading Volume of Stock Futures Trading Domestic Credit Provided by Banks (% GDP) Percentage of Firms Using Bank Credit to Finance Investment Total Net Assets of Mutual Funds Islamic Finance Net External Position of Banks External Position of Central Banks (as % GDP) Global Credit Rankings Source Milken Institute Master Card SRI International International Financial Services London World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Federation of Stock Exchanges World Bank World Bank Investment Company Institute International Financial Services London (IFSL) Bank for International Settlements Bank for International Settlements Institutional Investor Magazine Website www.milkeninstitute.org/research www.mastercard.com/us/company/en/wcoc/ index.html www.sri.com/news/releases www.ifsl.org.uk www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org www.world-exchanges.org http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/FS.AST. DOMS.GD.ZS http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IC.FRM. BNKS.ZS http://www.icifactbook.org/ http://www.thecityuk.com/what-we-do/theresearch-centre/reports.aspx http://www.bis.org/statistics/bankstats.htm http://www.bis.org/statistics/bankstats.htm http://www.iimagazinerankings.com/rankingsRankCCMaGlobal09/globalRanking.asp Updated since GFCI 10 Table 26 | Infrastructure related instrumental factors Instrumental factor Office Occupancy Costs Office Space Across the World Global Property Index Real Estate Transparency Index E-Readiness Ranking Telecommunication Infrastructure Index City Infrastructure Quality of Ground Transport Network Quality of Roads Roadways per Land Area Railways per Land Area Global Air Travel Connectivity Source CBRE Cushman & Wakefield Investment Property Databank Jones Lang LaSalle EIU United Nations Mercer HR World Economic Forum World Economic Forum CIA World Fact Book CIA World Fact Book City Rank Website http://www.cbre.com/EN/Research/Global+Reports/ www.cushwake.com/cwglobal http://www.ipd.com/ www.joneslanglasalle.co.uk www.economist.com/markets/rankings http://www.unpan.org/egovkb/global_reports/ 08report.htm http://www.mercer.com/qualityofliving http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/gcp/ TravelandTourismReport http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/gcp/ TravelandTourismReport https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/theworld-factbook/rankorder/2085rank.html https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/theworld-factbook/rankorder/2121rank.html http://www.cityrank.ch/indicators/14 Updated since GFCI 10 44 The Global Financial Centres Index 11 Table 27 | General competitiveness related instrumental factors Instrumental factor World Competitiveness Scoreboard Global Competitiveness Index Global Business Confidence Foreign Direct Investment Inflows FDI Confidence City to Country GDP Ratio GDP per Person Employed Global Innovation Index Global Intellectual Property Index Retail Price Index Price Levels Global Power City Index World Cities Survey Global Cities Index Number of International Fairs & Exhibitions City Population Density Innovation Cities Global Index Source IMD World Economic Forum Grant Thornton UNCTAD AT Kearney World Bank Price Waterhouse Cooper World Bank INSEAD Taylor Wessing Economist UBS Institute for Urban Strategies & Mori Memorial Foundation City Bank & Knight Frank AT Kearney World Economic Forum City Mayors Statistics 2thinknow Innovation Cities™ Project Website www.imd.ch/research www.weforum.org www.grantthorntonibos.com http://www.unctad.org http://www.atkearney.com/images/global/pdf/ Investing_in_a_Rebound-FDICI_2010.pdf https://www.ukmediacentre.pwc.com/content/ detail.aspx?releaseid=3421&newsareaid=2 http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SL.GDP. PCAP.EM.KD http://www.globalinnovationindex.org/gii/ http://www.taylorwessing.com/ipindex/ www.economist.com/markets/indicators http://www.ubs.com/1/e/wealthmanagement/we alth_management_research/prices_earnings.html http://www.mori-mfoundation.or.jp/english/index.shtml http://www.knightfrank.com/wealthreport/ http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php? story_id=4509 http://www.weforum.org/en/initiatives/gcp/ TravelandTourismReport http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/largestcities-density-125.html http://www.innovation-cities.com/innovationcities-global-index-2010-city-rankings/ NEW NEW Updated since GFCI 10 Long Finance Established in 2007 by Z/Yen Group in conjunction with Gresham College, the Long Finance initiative began with a conundrum – “when would we know our financial system is working?” Long Finance aims to “improve society’s understanding and use of finance over the long term” in contrast to the short-termism that defines today’s financial and economic views. 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